Jake Muir - Lady's Mantle

  • The LA-based artist makes sun-kissed ambient from surf rock samples.
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  • Jake Muir made his second album using samples from a "well-loved" surf rock band that he stretched and processed into oblivion. Not that you would necessarily know that from listening to it. Muir had previously released an album under the name Monadh on Further Records, a label based in his one-time home of Seattle that presented warm and fuzzy ambient in the vein of fellow Pacific Northwest artists like Loscil and Rafael Anton Irisarri. Now, Muir lives in the Los Angeles area, and his music has a newly warm, almost seaside feel, albeit one that's more Fennesz than Beach Boys. Arranging droning melodies and textures into sheets of sound, Lady's Mantle creates oceanic sketches with gentle loops and aquatic atmospheres. From the first moments of "High Tide," you hear a slow-motion rush of spraying sea foam. Listen carefully and you might make out some voices from the band that Muir is sampling, but their meaning—and melody—has been lost to time, remade over and over like a patch of sand constantly smoothed over by waves. On the album's most captivating compositions, like "Shoal" or "Drifter," changing filters make it feel as if you're being submerged under the sea, water flooding your ears, and coming back up again. Part of the appeal of Muir's work is how he smudges his samples until you can barely make them out. There's something that sounds like birdsong on "Shoal," while the shimmering leads on "Lapis Lazuli" could be guitar strums blurred into a sheen. The most dynamic tracks on Lady's Mantle have low-end sounds that almost rock with the steady beat of dub, like the slow trickle of "Peacock's Tail," which has the shadow of a rhythm in it. "Green Eyes" has something of a bassline hidden in its aquatic folds, and maybe even a chord progression. With just a bit more structure and a firm kick drum, this could be dub techno, but Muir holds firm, never disrupting his music's plangent drift. Most of the time, Lady's Mantle casually coasts by, its more assertive elements washing over you. By the time you reach its bobbing final stretch, it's easy to forget the surf rock band at the heart of it all—that's just another source of sound to be shaped into gossamer layers and polished into opalescent surfaces like the shiny stone on the album's cover.
  • Tracklist
      01. High Tide 02. Lapis Lazuli 03. Shoal 04. Yaupon 05. Peacock's Tail 06. Green Eyes 07. Buoy 08. Drifter 09. Lanterns Below
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